biography text

Portman was aged only 17 when first returned for Taunton, where he had recently inherited 25 messuages. Sales of Wards, 137. He represented the borough again in 1628-9, but left no trace on the records of either Parliament, and he died too young to distinguish himself as either a magistrate or a courtier. ‘Sick of body’ when he made his will on 26 Oct. 1629, five days before his death, Portman requested burial in the chancel at Orchard. He bequeathed £25 to the poor of Orchard and Taunton, and £2,000 each to his two unmarried sisters. John Symes* and Portman’s brother-in-law John Bluett* were named as executors. PROB 11/161, f. 412; Vis. Som. 127. The sermon preached at his funeral described him as ‘a fast friend, and a noble brother, a munificent and open-handed master, ... no firebrand in his country, nor meteor in his church. ... his life a recollected Christianity; his sickness, a penitent humiliation’. H. Sydenham, The Royall Passing-Bell (1630), pp. 36-7. His brother and heir, the 5th baronet, represented Taunton in the Short and Long Parliaments.

Author
Parliamentarian
4954